• news
  • SATURDAY MAY 26 2007 8:00 PM

Creationism Museum to Open in Kentucky; Now With More Dinosaurs



Dinosaurs and creation theory
live together in perfect harmony,
side by side on my laptop's keyboard;
Oh, Lord, why don't we-e-e...


Oh, uh, hello there!

I remember the first time I encountered a steadfast Creationist face to face. It was around ten years ago, I believe. We ended up in a very heated argument in the middle of eighth-grade homeroom period, the culmination of which was him telling me that dinosaur fossils were placed in the earth by God as a test of our faith, and me telling him that any God who would only half-ass the idea of dinosaurs is no God of mine.

I don't know if the new Creation Museum opening in Petersburg, Kentucky, this weekend is a sign of Fundamentalist Christians getting somehow more awesome over the years (in a strangely charming sci-fi sort of way), or just all the more utterly off their rocker, but either way it's kind of jaw-droppingly wonderful.

The Christian creators of the sprawling museum, unveiled on Saturday, hope to draw as many as half a million people each year to their state-of-the-art project, which depicts the Bible's first book, Genesis, as literal truth.

While the $27 million museum near Cincinnati has drawn snickers from media and condemnation from U.S. scientists, those who believe God created the heavens and the Earth in six days about 6,000 years ago say their views are finally being represented.

"What we've done here is to give people an opportunity to hear information that is not readily available ... to challenge them that really you can believe the Bible's history," said Ken Ham, president of the group Answers in Genesis that founded the museum.


Aw, H-E-double-hockey-sticks yes! That's $27 million well spent, I say. It's high time alternate realities were featured more prominently in museum form, and these guys aren't about to throw down for just any old tacky Disney Hall o' Presidents-type robot fare – the museum's exhibits are designed by Patrick Marsh, the man responsible for the Jaws and King Kong exhibits at Florida's Universal Studios. Marsh claims to have given his efforts to this cause on account of he's a devout believer himself; no word yet on his value system as it relates to freaky giant gorillas.

The main men behind this project are Mark Looy and the delicious-sounding Ken Ham, co-founders of Answers in Genesis, an "apologetics ministry" whose mission it is to provide creative interpretations of the Book of Genesis and reconcile it with modern science the best they can, providing all the better argument fodder for righteous eighth-graders everywhere. Their magazine alone boasts 50,000 subscribers, and they claim that 9,000 charter members have already signed on to fund the museum venture, placing it completely in the black. At least you can rest assured that it's not your tax dollars at work.

At this rate, you may be wondering what kind of wonders may await you at this Bizarro-Exploratorium. Well, wonder no more, my friends! We've got the goods:

It is a measure of the museum’s daring that dinosaurs and fossils — once considered major challenges to belief in the Bible’s creation story — are here so central, appearing not as tests of faith, as one religious authority once surmised, but as creatures no different from the giraffes and cats that still walk the earth. Fossils, the museum teaches, are no older than Noah’s flood; in fact dinosaurs were on the ark.

So dinosaur skeletons and brightly colored mineral crystals and images of the Grand Canyon are here, as are life-size dioramas showing paleontologists digging in mock earth, Moses and Paul teaching their doctrines, Martin Luther chastising the church to return to Scripture, Adam and Eve guiltily standing near skinned animals, covering their nakedness, and a supposedly full-size reproduction of a section of Noah’s ark.

There are 52 videos in the museum, one showing how the transformations wrought by the eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980 reveal how plausible it is that the waters of Noah’s flood could have carved out the Grand Canyon within days. There is a special-effects theater complete with vibrating seats meant to evoke the flood, and a planetarium paying tribute to God’s glory while exploring the nature of galaxies.


Wait, but now I'm confused. Shouldn't a proper Creation Theorist assume that the dinosaurs were bad eggs and were left to drown with the unicorns? Because if they didn't die in the Great Flood, and there's no evolution so they couldn't have evolved into something else, then what happened to the dinosaurs? I mean, where would they...

Shoot. I think I just got a brain freeze.

Anyway, the Creation Museum officially opens to the public on Memorial Day (that's the 28th to you foreign heathens), and its founders expect a quarter of a million visitors within the first year. Will you be one of them? I won't lie: I probably, would if I was remotely near the region. Even though the thought of paying to get in kind of makes me cringe, you've got to admit that, at the very least, it must be good for some ironic laughs and Kodak Moments. Plus, who can resist the pull of friendly animatronic dinosaur pals? I'll tell you who: no one. Not even God.

And that's a fact.

 

Previous

PAGE: 

1 ... 

7 | 8 | 9

Next

Comments
hor

hor

I'm lost
June 2005

MAY 31, 2007 04:18 PM

SPOILERS! (Click to view)

Tini said:
Ok ok so I can't wait to go to this....I now live in southern Ohio (about an hour from Cincy)....and my boyfriend and I can't fucking wait to go.....considering we're atheists, this should be interesting. I mean this museum is a fucking joke.....schools will probably bring their young, impressionable students to this and terrify them into believeing something that they might not have normally agreed to. It's complete and utter bullshit......separation of church and state? HA! Not likely here in the good ole US of A. If you think this is funny you should see this church on I-75 South heading from Dayton to Cincy....we like to lovingly referr to him as no other than
Touchdown Jesus



So yea, Ohio and Kentucky? We LOVE Jesus...no like REALLY apparently....funny it be that Touchdown Jesus is about a mile from the Hustler store.....YES nothing better than going to church and getting my fill of porn right afterwards...... I love it when my tax dollars go to something useful....like scaring children




"Touchdown Jesus!" tongue Brilliant.

otaku

otaku

USA
January 2004

MAY 31, 2007 07:46 PM

hor said:

SPOILERS! (Click to view)

Tini said:
Ok ok so I can't wait to go to this....I now live in southern Ohio (about an hour from Cincy)....and my boyfriend and I can't fucking wait to go.....considering we're atheists, this should be interesting. I mean this museum is a fucking joke.....schools will probably bring their young, impressionable students to this and terrify them into believeing something that they might not have normally agreed to. It's complete and utter bullshit......separation of church and state? HA! Not likely here in the good ole US of A. If you think this is funny you should see this church on I-75 South heading from Dayton to Cincy....we like to lovingly referr to him as no other than
Touchdown Jesus



So yea, Ohio and Kentucky? We LOVE Jesus...no like REALLY apparently....funny it be that Touchdown Jesus is about a mile from the Hustler store.....YES nothing better than going to church and getting my fill of porn right afterwards...... I love it when my tax dollars go to something useful....like scaring children




"Touchdown Jesus!" tongue Brilliant.



All it needs is a guy with a "John 3:16" sign behind him (preferably wearing a rainbow wig).

_Elichrusos

_Elichrusos

Australia
November 2004

MAY 31, 2007 11:12 PM

chainlink said:

madbax said:
If these were Muslims would that 10% that believe in creationism merely strap on a bomb and go kill as many as possible of the other 90%, for recognizing science?



Wow surreal

You know, I think a pretty good portion of Muslims believe God created the world too.
I don't have any stats for that but I'm gonna guess.


I'd think ALL Muslims believe God created the world. I'm presuming you mean they believe in the "six days and an all nighter" tripe.

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 01, 2007 11:26 AM

_Elichrusos said:

chainlink said:

madbax said:
If these were Muslims would that 10% that believe in creationism merely strap on a bomb and go kill as many as possible of the other 90%, for recognizing science?



Wow surreal

You know, I think a pretty good portion of Muslims believe God created the world too.
I don't have any stats for that but I'm gonna guess.



I'd think ALL Muslims believe God created the world. I'm presuming you mean they believe in the "six days and an all nighter" tripe.




I think in Islam it was just six days and it was a done deal, I'm not terribly familiar with Islamic creation theory though.
But yes, point was that I am quite sure that many Muslims take thier interpetation of Gods creation of man and the universe as literal truth. And also that many of them also open museums as a way to share thier beliefs rather than blow people up.

Ascanius

Ascanius

USA
October 2006

JUN 04, 2007 05:28 PM

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 04, 2007 05:58 PM

Ascanius said:



Hysterical !
" Now u know more then dem Bible scientist ?"

" Billy Graham Museum sucks, all they gots is a talkin cow " !

Bah ha ha !

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 04, 2007 06:34 PM

This is a little more mainstream, but has a lot of actual footage at the museum. The animatronics rock !


Ascanius

Ascanius

USA
October 2006

JUN 04, 2007 07:24 PM

English Reporter: If the T-rex had been on Noah's ark, wouldn't he have eaten the other animals?

Dumbass 'curator': Well no, I uh, the uh, the fear- the fear of man wasn't put into the animals until after the animals came off the ark- until after the flood.

Huh?

I do like the way that reporter says can-tucky, though.

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 04, 2007 08:51 PM

Ascanius said:
English Reporter: If the T-rex had been on Noah's ark, wouldn't he have eaten the other animals?

Dumbass 'curator': Well no, I uh, the uh, the fear- the fear of man wasn't put into the animals until after the animals came off the ark- until after the flood.

Huh?

I do like the way that reporter says can-tucky, though.



Ha ! So funny.
Thats exactly the part I picked up on too. I was like ' hey ! buddy ! That's not an answer."
Actually it makes it even more questionable doesn't it ? Having a God instilled horrible fear of man might have been a reason for olde T-Rex not to eat everybody right ?

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 10, 2007 01:41 PM

Here are the Islamist Creationists !

The controversial author of books advocating an Islamic version of creationism claimed on Friday modern science had no monopoly on truth and insisted that his views were gaining ground.
ADVERTISEMENT

In a bizarre news conference held aboard a luxury yacht off Istanbul's northern Bosphorus shores near the mouth of the Black Sea, Adnan Oktar, also known by his pen-name Harun Yahya, said the evils of the world were a direct result of Darwinism.

"Communism, fascism, and Freemasons stand on the tenets of Darwinism, and the world power of capitalism stands on the same ... Hitler and Mao were both Darwinists," said Oktar, immaculately dressed in an egg-shell white suit, necktie and sporting a trim beard and combed-back hair.

Oktar, speaking in Turkish, said one million of his books and movies were being downloaded from Internet sites every month. Copies of his books and movies had been distributed in 170 countries, he added.

"I think there is not a single person who has read my book and who does not believe there is no evolution," he said.



I'm always intriged when they refer to people as Darwinists, as if it were a religion of its own.

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 17, 2007 08:14 PM


BEHOLD !! The Finger of Justice !

d_day

d_day

San Bernardino, CA
July 2002

JUN 17, 2007 08:20 PM

chainlink said:

BEHOLD !! The Finger of Justice !



You bastard! I was just coming to post that!

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

JUN 17, 2007 08:29 PM

tsk, great minds . . .

It really was too funny not to. smile

Previous

PAGE: 

1 ... 

7 | 8 | 9

Next